Results 261 to 270 of about 4,293 (313)
Structural effects of nominative-genitive conversion in Japanese
秀樹 岸本 +2 more
openalex +1 more source
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Studia Logica, 2010
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
openaire +1 more source
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
openaire +1 more source
Journal of Philosophical Logic, 2003
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
openaire +3 more sources
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
openaire +3 more sources
What's nominal in nominalizations?
Lingua, 2011This article investigates the nature of syntactic categories: What does it mean to be a noun or a verb? The discussion focuses on nominalizations. It is shown that there is a distinction between nouns and verbs at a basic level. The essential difference between verbs and nouns resides in the availability in principle of merging instructions in the ...
openaire +2 more sources
AS‐nominals and AS‐nominalizers
2013AbstractThis chapter provides a detailed analysis of the structure of ‘long’ AS-nominals (cases in which both subject and object are fully articulated and no by-phrase is used), and further puts forth a distinction between the nominalizing affixes -ing and -ation (the latter including its ‘kin’, i.e. -ance/ence, -ment,; -al, and possibly -age) based on
openaire +1 more source
Nominalism Through De‐Nominalization
Noûs, 2001Etude de la critique du consensus entre semantique du premier ordre, semantique du second ordre et theorie des ensembles chez Quine, developpee par G. Boolos a partir d'un scheme distinguant les quantificateurs monadiques et les quantificateurs polyadiques.
Agustin Rayo, Stephen Yablo
openaire +1 more source
Language and Linguistics Compass, 2010
Abstract Many languages have morphosyntactic systems that impose a classification on their nominal lexicon. The nature of these systems varies widely, ranging from large systems of lexico‐syntactic numeral classifiers, as known from East and South East Asian languages, to highly grammaticalized gender agreement systems of, e.g ...
openaire +1 more source
Abstract Many languages have morphosyntactic systems that impose a classification on their nominal lexicon. The nature of these systems varies widely, ranging from large systems of lexico‐syntactic numeral classifiers, as known from East and South East Asian languages, to highly grammaticalized gender agreement systems of, e.g ...
openaire +1 more source
The roots of nominality, the nominality of roots
2014AbstractThis chapter explores a perspective on nominal meaning, which does not take noun referents for granted but instead focuses on the conceptualization of entity types as the distinctive property of nouns. This perspective on the lexical semantics of nouns is descriptively useful and allows a characterization of nominality as a primitive lexical ...
openaire +1 more source

